To find duplicate dependencies or its required dependencies, you can visualize library dependencies in tree. Execute gradle command as below.
gradle -q dependencies yourProject:dependencies --configuration compile
Note that, run gradlew in Windows as below.
gradlew -q dependencies yourProjec...
well, in Germany you simply don't get a car when you are either below 5 years of driving experience or being younger than 25. I think some changed that and double the price, too
I have an Android app and I am trying to use facebook's sdk (version 4.1.0) to get a token and login. Here is my code:
public class LoginActivity extends Activity {
private CallbackManager callbackManager;
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super....
my pc crashed resulting in 2 empty source files I worked on today and yesterday (huge refactoring). The crash obviously also deleted the local history... so I fucking lost a bunch of work I was so close to finish just because WE USE FUCKING SUBVERSION AND I CAN'T COMMIT on a fucking branch on a regular basis
you get to do part of your studies AND/OR part or 100% of your required "Workplace mandatory experience" outside, in the real world, living almost by yourself, on another country, and the school/academy/uni plans and finds a college / uni / academy / workplace for you
she picked the 2nd, the workplace experience one :P
So far so good, too! I haven't written any code yet, but I've helped my coworker (we only have 2 android devs at this office, and one in Chicago) identify a couple bugs and suggest a solution that he liked, so I'm glad that I'm making impact already.
I was just hoping I would come in and not look stupid.
I'm using RxJava for my Lux rewrite. It's super useful when creating data pipelines. Even more super useful if your data is immutable and manipulated by only pure functions.
(Speaking of which, PCollections ftw. Let's you be immutable without eating memory like crazy)
it's for asynchronous programming, but not strictly for networking. So it differs from libraries like OkHttp because that's focussed on asynchronous network calls
I might have worded that funny, but that's how I look at the differences.
It literally just means given a list of items, you take a function and apply it to each element in said list. Say you had a function called 'inc' that just added 1 to whatever you passed into it. You also have an array/vector of values [1 2 3 4 5]. If you map the function 'inc' to that vector, you get [2 3 4 5 6].
Yeah. I also just had to run over it with my coworker to ask how they do things, like how specific I should be in JIRA, and what our naming conventions are for feature branches, etc.
So I'm using Cloud9 to develop right now because my school blocks a lot of stuff. So I'm using it up until now, and the ide.c9.io still works, but I go to try to test it at blahblah-tristanwiley.c9users.io and NOPE. Blocked because it's "security.malware"
> Sorry, c9users.io is not currently accessible because it is categorized as security.malware.